Farm, Garden and Household. , Siibsolling. A member broached, in the Farmers' Club, the subject of subaoiling and trenoh-ploughing ns a mentis of im proving lnnd. The former differs from the latter in stirring without bringing up the subsoil, while the latter inverts md turns it upon the top of the turn ed furrows. , Mr. Dodge One plan or the other must be followed according to the na ture of the soil and of the subsoil as well. If the subsoil closely resembles that at and near the surface, the plough may be run deeper and the ground trenched to any depth; if, on the other hand, the subsoil is hard and infertile, we must take care to pulverize it with ' out getting it above the warm, rich soil, where seeds sprout easily and grain and grass start quickly and grow without interruption, because the constituents of plant- food are within easy reach and in soluble form. Common sense must govern in deep tillage as in every other farming operation that pays. It is all grounded on a law of nnture. When a soil is of such texture that it will hold just moisture enough and allow the rest to filter away; when the heat of the sun can penetrate deep into the mould, and when all the chemical agencies that we know nre constantly at work in the ground to produce plant food and there by enrich the land have a fair chance to exert themselves, then of course, we get the best crops, and find that deep tillage pays. That depth of soil is al ways availed of by plants is shown by the corn in Kansas, where I have seen, the roots go down to a depth of eighteen inches. Col. Curtis I think the utility of deep tillage has been too fully demon strated for us to waste time in going over ground this Club has travelled a hundred times before. But there is one matter connected with deep fur rows that is not yet properly appre ciated. I mean the mixture of a por tion of a clay subsoil with a light or sandy top soil. I once dug am open ditch across a field. The surface soil was sandy but that at the bottom of the ditch a heavy clay. The jclay thrown out upon the surface so enriched it that when the crop grew the next summer the clayed streak showed a dark green belt across the field by contrast with the rest. Another timo I spread clay from the bottom of a well twelve feet deep. After exposure for a year to sun, frost, and air, it received the roots of a young apple tree, which lias been growing thriftily for years. Professor Whitney The practice of our friend Curtis is founded 'on sound Bcience. It is well known that three or four per cent, even of clay on a sandy soil will greatly increase its capacity for absorbing mannrial elements from solu tions and modify materially its proper ty of retaining moisture and also change its mechanical condition. There enn be no doubt that plant roots seek nourish ment at any depth. I have" been told that the blue grass of Kentucky sends the root fibrils to a depth of two feet, and the thread-like roots of corn have been traced vertically eight feet below the stalk. I have-noted, in Southwes tern Missouri, the depth of roots as shown by slides in railway cuttings, and have frequently found it to be from one to two feet in the natural soil. As to the subsoil of the Mapes farm and of Salem County, N. J., some of our mem bers present will recall that I analyzed beth a few years since. In each the proportion of organic matter was con siderable, and it was plain to me that thorough and deep tillage had done for the tough ferruginous clay subsoil of the one what a bountiful Providence had provided in the light and friable sub soil' of the other. To Get n Good Well of Water. In answer to an inquiry, B. G.. in the Scientific American, savs: I have the test pump water in the neighborhood ; my plan was the following: Hang in a well, suspended by a string, a coarse canvas bog, with three or four good sized lime stones and one or two lumps of charcoal in it. Have a string long enouerh to nearlv rpnli tlm li the well. In a week or two take out the cnarcoal, throw back the lime stones into the Well. With fiv nnnnla if off coal. Put a round or square wooden shoot up at the back of the pump ; carry the shoot up higher than th free ventilation. If the pump is out of ,,4. i.l A . , jjut u iee on top; it under cover, a finn wita wmwa it;! An t u. Li., can cover up his well, and I think he will have no more trouble in getting a unu ui goou water at home. Kveilii8tliiK Fence lila, A correspondent of the Western Jiural . HT T ' 1 bj; - j. uiscoverea many years ago that wood could be mado to last longer than iron in the ground, but thought the crocess so niirmlA nml i that it was not worth while making any stir about it. I would as soon have poplar, basswood, or quakiner ash as any other kinds of timber for fence posts. I have taken out basswood nost after having been set seven years that were as sound when taken up as when they were first nnt in flip and weather seemed to have no effect on them. The posts can be prepared for less than two cents apiece. For the bene fit of others I will give the recipe: Take boiled linseed oil and stir in it pulver ized charcoal to tln Put a coat of this over the timber, and mere is not a man that will live to see rotted." it A Useful Agent, The uses to which water is applied increase with every year. By the quiet pressure 01 water the largest of dock gates are now opened and closed with the utmost ease ; newspapers are print- cu, huh are woriiea in hotels ana lacto ries, and the scenes are shifted in the , atres. By the hydraulic machinery ore is raised irom deep mines, ships are loaded and unloaded in dock. Water can be used to blow the bellows of an organ, and in this or any other inter mittent purpose there is the advantage that it is always ready. Pull a lever, or turn a tap, and it begins to work. There is no lighting of a fire, and waiting half an hour, as in the case of steam. And now an ingenious mechanism at Paris has contrived a way to close and open shop-shutters by means of the ordinary water supply. The winch, and cog wheels, and connecting 'apparatus at present employed, are not required ; with twenty gallons of water, at a sixty feet pressure, more than twenty square Jrards of iron shutters can be raised or owered merely by turning a cap inside the shop. Tho water-tubes, and indeed an the apparatus, are inside the shop. which renders it easy to guard against tne enects of frost : while failure of wa ter could be prevented byBtoringaday's Buppiy in a cistern. A man in Otsego. Minn., lately had an orchard of 100 fine apple trees all cut aown in uie night by some mghminded enemy. Where tho Bad Boys Go To t The Knnsas City Times' correspond ent, writing from Denver, gives this theory, and story as well, of where the bad boya- go to. The usual ones are well known, but he has struck a new lead, as follows : The bad boy of the family often troes West. I have seen him often. The last noticeable time he was in the yard of a not very larce house, about two blocks from the post-office, in Denver. tie stood in hia careless, lazy way, bo fore a short, thick-set man, who held a greasy msmorandum book in his hand. This was the wagon boss. The covered wagons, three or four, wore standing in the yard, and a dozen or fourteen young fellows were sitting and lying around, just such as used to crack their whips and bang the revolvers , about the bluffs of Kansas City. "Been out before?" " Yes ; just come in." " Understand mules ?" "You bet." " Eeady fixed for a trip ?" "Yah.'v "How many Injuns are you good for?" This bad boy of somebody's swung off a step or two sideways to the fence corner and picked up a belt, raised the flaps from the butts of a pair of the largest navy's and answered " About 12 1 reckon. " Talk Injun or Greaser any ?" " Some." " All right. What's your name ?" Our bad boy looked over at his chums and grinned while thinking over which of his half dozen aliases he should give, and then said, " Harry Smith. "Well, it b S40.a month; good ra tions j start at daylight ; be on hand to load up." Outside of the fence and out of sight of his companions, ho nndid another button of his hunting skirt, and Bhowed a concealed belt and purse. "JLfeppo, said lie, ."when 1 come back from this surveying expedition down the Platte, I shall have enough to buy a six mule team ; then I'm going it on my own hook ; when I've made my pile, I'm going back to the folks. Have you seen them lately"? They don't know wnere i am. " But in spite of his good intentions. it is more than likely he will do nothing of the sort. The purse will shrink and fill again many times as it has before when lying around Denver or coming in from a trip, and when the required sum is about complete, a partner is sure to get sick or in prison and have to be helped out, and they will both " go on a bum " with the remainder. Hans Christian Anderson, among his many stories, tells a capital story of an "Ugly Duckling." It got among the steady going ducks and geese somehow, but as it had little likeness to them, they drove it out as a deformed and ugly creature. But when at last it reached its proper waters and its kind, it discovered itself to be a stately swan. These ugly ducks of bad boys lose their deformities on the plains, for, after all, kid gloves and walking caucs are not the best things to go surveying among the Indians with, to say nothing of correct morals. Denver is having a troublesome time with ugly ducks, warring with their 1 cricket varieties, closing their gamb ling dens, enforcing ordinances. When the boys can no longer stand the pres sure they "put out." After owhile the icy barriers of correct society of the West will freeze around the bad boys closer and closer, till they are quite froze out, and the only place left for them to migrate to will be the peni tentiary. Up in a Balloon. It is now almost a fixed fact that Pro fessor John Wise, Secretary of the me teorological section of the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, will start from Boston Common on July 4th on his aerial voyage' across the Atlantic. Mr. Washington H. Donaldson, the daring aeronaut, and two scientific gentlemen, not yet selected although there are many applicants for the adventure will accompany him. The Common Council of Boston have appropriated the sum of $3,000 for the purchase of the materials for the balloon and for other necessary apparatus, provided the Boston men of science can be satisfied that the professor's theory is a plaus ible one. Professor Wise says he can do this beyond all question. He will make the journey of 3,000 mile's in not more than seventy hours and probably only sixty. Jiis confidence in the suc cess of his venture is based on the the ory, which his frequent experiences as an aeronaut have proved to be a true one, that the entire upper atmosphere surrounding the earth moves with the revolution of the earth Eastwardly. According to this, as soon as this air tide is struck by the balloon the air-ship will drift Europeward at the rate of 100 miles an hour. But this immjense rate of speed will not be a source of peril to the voyagers, for, as Professor Wise ex- plains, to the voyager the balloon, no matter how fast it may go, seems to stand still. Professor Wise does not claim that he can return across the At lantic through the air, his theory only involving the practicability of the voy age to the East. He will take a mail out with him which he will engage to deliver at their destination in three days' time or less. The air-ship in which this extraordinary venture will be made will consist of three balloons, one nearly three times as large as the other two. They will be capable oi lilting 11,000 pounds, exclusive of their own weight, basket, life-boat, Arc, of which latter, one fully equipped for an ocean accident will be carried along. -The basket and its appurtenances will be something novel. It will resemble covered room, with a cellar, where the water and food for the trip will be kept, It will have windows on all sides, and lime-stove for heat and cooking, while an electric light will be secured at night by means of a vacuum tube with plati num tuue at each enu. Origin of Chloroform, We are indebted to the insect tribe for chloroform, one of the most power- ful agents in alleviating pain. The little ant contains a substance called formic acid, about which old John Bay and Martiu Lester corresponded a century ago ; and they found that it contained an acid, and so it got into the books as formic acid. It was found to be com posed of a compound radial formyle, and three atoms of oxygen. Dumas substituted chlorine for the oxygen, and thus obtained tirchloride of formyle which is chloroform. Then the Ameri cans found that ether was capable of taking away all sensations of the human body, and Dr. bimpson, of Edinburgh found that tirchloride of formyle was more thoroughly adapted for this pur pose than even ether. All this has arisen from a study of the habits of insects. A servant girl in Terre Haute. Ind. has $1,175 in the bank, all saved from her smalt weekly earnings. Earnings of the American People. In your paper lately, says a" corre spondent writing to a New York journal, was a paragraph headed, "Average Earnings in the United States," in which there was this statement; It appears from the last census returns of the wealth, the population and earn ings of the United States, " that the average annual earnings of the whole American pople do not exceed $800 a year each. The population of the United States in June, 1870, was 38,555,983, and on average of earnings of $800 to each person would make the sum of $30,844, 78G.400. The total value of the whole real and personal property of the coun try was estimated in 1670, according to the true value in tho census, at $30,008, 518,507 ; less by $776,267,893 than the " annual earnings of the whole Ameri can people " at $800 each. The mere statement of this carries along with it the evidence of its error. The average earnings of the whole American people at $125 each, gives to each family of five persons the sum of $625. This estimate is too high. The census report of 1870 estimates the value of all farm productions, including betterments and additions to stock, at $2,447,538,658 ) and the value of all our manufactured product for 1870 at $4,232,325,442, mak ing a total gross value of our agricul tural aud monnfnetured product for that year of $6,679,864,100. Mr. David A. Wells, in his report as Special Com missioner, in 1869, estimates the values created by the leading industries of the country at $4,323,000,000. The agri cultural industry he estimated at $3, 182,950,000. In the supplement to the annual re port of the Special Commissioner, pre pared by Mr. Wells, in which the cost pf labor and subsistence is given in the several States in almost every employ ment, tho average weekly earnings of operatives in cotton mills in the United States in 1869 was $5.56, gold. This would make the earnings of each opera tive for the year, in currency, $357.61. In the Southern States, the average daily wages paid for farm and other labor was $1.23, without board, for ex perienced hands in summer. Mr. Wells estimates the average earn ings of 4,705,000 common laborers, domestic servants, and of all distribu tors, at $340 per annum to each person. He also estimates the average earnings of all the agriculturists and persons engaged in the railway service aud fisheries, and in cotton, woolen, and leather manufacture, and in the pro duction of pig and bar iron, at $455 each per annum. This is a fraction over $1.50 a day for 300 days in the year. Here in our goodly land labor is bet ter paid, better fed. better clothed. better housed, and better provision made for education, than in any other land ; but you will see that it is a great error to put the average earnings of tho whole population at $800 year, a this would give $4,uuu to each lamily. Advice ATbont Sea Traveling:. In selecting state-rooms, says the European correspondent of the St. Liouis Mail, those located amidship and in the lower cabin are the mostdesirable the lower down you are and nearer the centre, the loss you are susceptible to the motion of the ship. Most peo ple, in choosing rooms, when shown the cabin plans, select those in the upper or deck cabin, fancying that they are the best in every particular ; but after a day or so at sea they see their mistake and heartily wish themselves below. It is also advisable to be .provided with easy traveling chairs for deck use, as you will not find them on any vessel, and as you win probably spend the greater portion of your time on deck, they will be found an indispensable article. As to seasickness, there may be some preventions, but the only one we are aware ot is to have an attack ol bilious fever just before you sail. Generally, however, it is best t let natmre have its course, and you will get through all right so say old salts. A few lemons and ranges with you will rlo much toward alleviating the nausea peculiar to sea-siciiuess and aid you in recover ing on appetite. A loss of appetite is one of the features of the complaint, and in such cases one should eat regu larly, even if unable to hold it m his stomach a moment, and continue to eat until he can. This strengthens the stomach and assists in your recovery ; whereas, if you submit without a strug gle and eat nothing, it will- leave yon in a very exhausted condition, which may take weeks to recover. Some people do not get sea-sick, and, instead, suffer from dry, racking headache, as was our personal experience ; and when this is the case, it is best to provoke sickness by swallowing a tumbler of hot salt water and mustard, which generally produces the desired enect. The Gahrielle Polonaise M'alking Suit. The Gabrielle polonaise suit has tho square smooth sides and the flat fronts without a wrinkle that form conspicuous features of mauy imported garments this season. This polonaise is close fitting, yet its construction is so perfect that it requires but one dart in each front, as sufficient fullness for the bust is given by extending the fronts and facing them. The back is of regular Gabrielle shape, with side forms, and a seam down tho middle, and abundant fullness for tho tournure added at the waist ; the skirt is very long behind, and is caught up in deep upturned pleats on the side, and sewed to the plain front, A row of buttons is usually placed down this side seam. In the garment the front is merely fastened by hooks and loops, as buttons would interfere with the swinging cords on the breast: simi lar cords aro sometimes used in the back of the garment to catch the skirt up ina panier pouf. These cords are now lm ported in ecru linen for batistes, and in white for pique dresses, as well as in black silk and jet passementerie cords they have not, however, become as pop ular here as they are abroad, and many ladies .omit them from this polonaise, and use buttons down the front instead, The Gabrielle polonaise is especially becoming to full figures,' and will rival the loose front polonaise as a model for summer dresses, such as thin grena dines, piques, batistes, and linens. side sash of irregular long loops and ends is placed on the left of the back. and a belt may be worn, if preferred. Kaisinq Sunken Bodies. An import ant series of trials has recently been made in England to raise sunken bodies by means of improved kinds of inflated pontoons. In one instance an iron body weighing seven tons was brought .to the surface by a single pontoon, the latter having been mnated by means of an in let pipe and small air machine worked by hand from the surface of the water, The pontoons can be attached to any body which is at a depth to which di vers can descend, and it is believed will be serviceable in raising sunken ships, Manufacture of Ho'r Cloth. Hair cloth is made from the hair of horses tails, which is brought, some of it from South America, but more from Russia. In the latter country it is col lected at the great fairs of Nizni, Nov gorod, and iBbilt. It is -of nil shades of color, and for use is dyed black. The poorest quality sells for about 50c. a pound j the best for $1, the price rapid ly increasing as the length exceeds twenty-four inches. In the fobrication of hair cloth the hair is wet with water, and when well soaked is put in the loom to be woven with a cotton warp. The weaving mechanism is so perfect in its operation that if one of the hairs form ing the weft is missed, the device act ing upon it continues to work until it has grasped it, all the other parts of the machine standing still. Sarah fW.tr. who. three tears atfO. was convicted in Virginia of murder by poisoning, and sentenced to oe nangeu, has just had a new trial at Petersburg, and has been found guilty of " volun tary manslaughter." the term of impris onment being fixed by the jury at four years. Chables Gounod, the composer of Faust, and the most celebrated compos er for the orernn livinor. is using the Mason k Hamlin Cabinet Organs in his concerts in London, and writes to the iiinglish agents for these instruments, commending them highly. Com. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pel lets or TantelePH, Contort, 'Concentrated Hoot and Herbal Juico, Anti-Bilious granules the " Little Giant " Cathartic or muttum in parvo physic. No use of any longer taking the huge, repulsive, nauseous ana griping puis, com posed of cheap, crude, bulky ingredients, when, ny & caretui application or enemicai science, we can extract all the cathartic and medical properties from the most valuable roots and herbs and concentrate them into a minute Tcllet or GranuIe,crtrrWi lararr than a mustard ti'cd, that can be readily swallowed by those of the most sensitive stomachs ana fastidious tastes. 25 cents by all druggists. CSS Some say that the use of tobacco is another form of intemperance, but no man is intemperate that wears tne Llmitnou Dollar. or sale at all furnishing stores. com. The Pobf.st and Sweetest Cod Liver Oil iH Hazard A Caswoll's. made on the sea shore, from fresh, selocted livers, of the Cod only, by Caswell, IlAZAnn fe Co., New York. It is absolutely pnrt ana street. 1'a- tients who hnvo once taken it prefer it to all. otherB. i'hysicians have decided it superior to all other oils inmarkot. II 'Johnsons Anoajinc jjtnnnent is half as valuable as people say it is. no family should bo without it. Certainly no person, be he lawyer, doctor, minister, or of any other profession, should start on a journey without it. No sailor, fisherman, or woodsman should be without it. In fact, it is needed wherever there is an acho, Bpraiu, cut, bruiso, congh or cola. o oiii. Cbistadoro's Excelsior Haib Dye stands unrivaled and alone. Its meritB have been so universally acknowledged that it wonld be a supererogation to (lescant on tnem anv further nothing can beat it. Com. PAIN! PAIN!! PAIN1!! WHEBE is thy believer t Bcaders, you will find it in that Favorite Home .nemeuy PERRY DAVIS PA IK-KIL LER. It has been tested in every variety of climate, and by almost every nation known to Americans. It is the almost constant companion and inestimable friend of the missionary ulid traveler, on Bea and land, and no one should travel on our lakes or riven tinoui u. Its ManiTa Ana TJMBunPAsaiD. Tf vou are sufTeiliiir from INTERNAL TAIN. 7 ireifu to 'linrtu limits in a Jjiltle li flrer win ni- moBt i'liBtaiitly cure you. Tnere is nothing equal to it. lu a low moments it cures Colic, Cramps, Spasms, Heart-burn, Diarrhaa, jjyseniery, f lux, n mi in itte nou-ets, oour Stomach, iJyspepsia, Sick Headache. Cures CHOLEBA, when all other Remedies Fail. It gives Instant Belief from Aching Teeth. In Bectionfl of the country where Feveb AWD Anns prevails, thore is uo remedy held in greater Btciun. For Feveh and aouk. Take tnroe tanieBpoon- fuls of the ratn-Killer in about naif a pint or not water, well Bweetenea witn moniBscs as me attaca r rnmiiu nn. Hathmtf freelv tne ckest. back, and bowels with the Pain-Killer Rt the flame time. Be- neat the dose in twenty minutes if the rt rat does not Btop tne emu. biiouiu u jiruuutu vuuiiiiuv iuiiu probably will, if the Btoniaeh is very foul), take a Jlltt, JTlliri-flUIKI 111 ITUlll 1.1UI BWCUfcUHCU I.U niar after each snasm. perseverance in tne floove atment nas eurea many severe ana ousnnaie cases oi tins aiaeuBC. GREAT u CnOLERA" REMEDY PAIK-KILLKJi. Tt ia an External and Internal Remedy. For Sum mer Complaint or any other form of bowel disease n childrfjn or adults, it is an almost certain cure. and has without doubt, been more successful in eurini the various kinds of CHOLERA than any other known remedy, or the most skillful physician. in luaia, Ainca ana unina, wnere mis areauim uio- eaBe is more or leas prevalent, tne rain-niuer is considered by the nativeB as well ns by European rCBlUI'UlH 111 IIIUBB enmities, A Dunn i...nr.xj , and while it ifl a most etneient remedy for pain, it is a perfectly safe medicine in the most unskillful hands. It has become a houBeliold remedy, rrom the fact that it mvea immediate and permanent re lief. It is a nurelv veietablo preparation, made from the best and purest materials. Bafo to keep and use lu every Mnnly. It is recommenced oy olivsieiatiB and nei soiib of ull classes, and to-day. after a public trial of thirty yearB the avcraKe life of man it BtandB unrivalled and unexcelled, spreading ltB usefulness over the wide world. niroctlons accompany each Bottle. Price 25 cts., 50 eta., and 1 per Bottle. PERRY DAVIS A BON, Proprietor!, Providence, B. I. J. N. HABRIS 4 CO., Cincinnati, O., Proprietors for the Western and South Westorn states. For sale by all Medicine Dealers. FOB SALS WHOLESALE BY JOHN T. HENRY. Now Tork. OliO. O. GOODWIN 4 CO., Boston. JOHNSON, UOLOWAY A CO., FhiladelpDla. TnK late Gov. Geary uronouncert Dr. Bhallen- factiou A single trial will- istnLiiitfii ltn men is. Headachb, Languor and Melancholy gpner- llv B until' from a Disoruercu bit mitten, uoBtive- neBfl, or a Toriitd Liver. Enth mny ue readily re moved by lr. Javne'8 Sanative Fine, a few aoaei of which will be f und to 8tiinulae the Liver and (stomach to healthy action, removing uu jsuiuus- ness, a ii a uroauuing regular evacuations us me UUWOIH. frencli Stamping Pnttrrna Good "Wages X can be made in aim t any town liv Btamuuiif. Vull instruction naukaiu sent bv mail fr ?2. LateBt patterns afterwardB Buoplici at list prices. Bond for Circular. Mine. L. remit iar, G30 U road way, K V, A t Her Week 1ST CASH to irood Aucnts 0"x" Aiidrcss A. Oouitkh Co. .Charlotte. Mich! Itluslcal'Ahnaiiac aent free on application CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY. (Milwaukee & Bt aul Railway Co.) extending from ( lili airo to Milwaukee, La Cl-onne. Winona. Iluullnira. Bit. Paul and MinneavolU. Also tu Maciuon. Prairie (ill ( Men, AiiBtin, Owatonun. Charles City, Maaon City and Alcona also to Janesvllle, iuuuiuo, mjuii, ueriiu ana VBiiao.H Bmbi-aoiuK murtiuine Cent rea and Pleas, ure lieaoi'ta than anv Nurthweateru Hue. CH1CAUO DEPOT-Corner Canal and Iatlionatreet, (with Pittsburg, Fort Wayne ruSvJ,llJ1ia-'lrt Chicaifo. Alton 4 St. Louis R'ys.) NlLWAtKUlj: DlipOT-Corner Ileetl aiiiiiu ater street. Counseling iu Bt. Paul with all Railways diTS " w m aiv urnauway. Bobios Orrios 1 Court street. QsaiBAi, Oraicas Milwaukee, Wis. t ..8. B. MERRILL, Gen. Manage JKO. 0. GATJLT, Aas't Gen. Mauager. A. V. U. CAHPItf XEB, Q. I. aud T. Agent. Knur V ., .. . . Fanners and " Horse Men " are con tinvmlly inquiring what we know of the utility of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders, and in reply, wo wonld say, through the columns of this paper, that we have heard frsm hundreds who have uped thom with gratifying roBUlts mat is also our experience. Com. rof. Anderson s JJbrmadob good ton Man. My eon wan taken with a swelling on his leg, Just aboT the ankle joint. I paid our family physician t20 for attending to it, with no benefit. Some time after I was advised by a friend to uae " Asdbbson's Dermador." I used one Dome on uie swelling ana enectsa a permanent cure. A. M. KILLS. Standing Btone, Pa, FiiAoa'S Instant Kemef has stood twenty years' tent. Is warranted to give im mediate relief to au xtnenmatio, jNouraigio, Head, Ear and Back aches, or money refunded. Crippled ConitMnlloni It 1) difficult to ruin a strong constitution. To weaken, Injure or cripple tliti source of physical vigor and endurance Is an easier task and may al- ways be accomplished by positively disregarding or violating certain hygeian laws, the observance of which is essential to the well-being of the body and to the sustainmentof that vital force by which It Is animated and tupi otted. But a good consti tution is wonderfully elastic, and even after it has been very hardly dealt with by Its possossor, all Its pristine vigor may be recovered If the proper course of treatment Is adopted, Hostcttor's Stom ach Bitten may bo Justly donomlmtod a constitu tional tonic. Not only does it improve the appo tlte, stimulate the stomach, tone and regulate the disordered livor and bowels and steady the tremb ling nerves, but it also (and this is the most im portant effect) restores the Btamiual strength of the system, whore it has given way under the pressure nf excessive labor, exposure, privation, aiute disease, fast living, a foul atmosphere, ex traordinary heat or other cause. In Bummer the constttutlon Is often severely tried by a long con tinuance of hot weather. Nothing tolls more heavily upon the sources of vital activity than solar heat, and hence the expediency of rocrulling and replenishing them with a wholesome, vege table tonic, like Hostcttor's Bitters, during the Bummer months The Markets. MEW YORK Beef Cattle Prime to Extra ! ! .12,a Mii .11 a .10 a .10 a .13 .12 .11 H MX MX First quality Second Ordinary thin Cattle... Inferior Milch Cows ?.. 40.00 aSO.OO Hogfl Live .onjda .mx .05 v ."7 .lflka .20 ureseeu cotton Middling.' Sheep. Flour Extra Western Mo a 0.75 State Extra fl.50 a 7.00 a l.fin Wheat Bed Western l.fin " State, 1.77?,'a 1.77 No. 2 Spring l.fi) a 1.55 Bye Barley- Malt Oats Mixed Western Corn Mixed Western Hay Straw .! 1.00 .45 .f-2 1.10 .50 .10 14.00 a .ill a 1.30 a .47 a .57 a 1.40 a 1.10 a .15 alC.fi-2V Hons '72s, .35 a .45 '70s Pork Mess , Lard Petroleum Crude 8a . .07Xa .0H?4 Kenned Butter State .26 a .29 .22 a .52 .17 a .20 .14 a .10 .25 a ,1H .15 a .15V .05 a .10 .12 a .13 .17 a .18 6.40 a 6.12)j 4.R0 a (1.09 5.00 a 5.17 7.25 alO.OO 1.31 a 1.42 .45 a .47 .41 a .43 .8? a .$5 ,K4 a .9i .09 a .09)4 1.87 a 2.10 .94 a .94 .fit a .04 .9 a .90 .55 a .65 B.ro a 9.25 1.85 a 1.85 .05 a .65 .65 a .05 Ohio Faney " Yellow Western Ordinary Pennsylvania fine Cheese State Factory " tSKlmmed Ohio Eggs State Beef Cattle Bheep Hojra Live Flour Wheat No. 2 Spring . . Corn Oats Eye Barley Lard ALBAKY. Bye State Corn Mixed Barley State Oats State PHILADELPHIA. Flour Penu. Extra Wheat Western Bed Corn Yellow Mixed Petroleum Crude ..13,Keflnedl94 Beef Cattle m Clover Seed 8.00 a .on a 7.75 a 4.37tf ;a .n a 7.75 a 3.10 a .63 a .60 Timothy .25 BALTIMORE. Cotton Low MidlingB 1TJ Flour-Extra 6.50 Wheat 1.50 Corn-Yellow f-2 Oata. .47 And Its Cure. Victlinii of this awful disease are founi in every nolrriiimThnnfl. in almoBt t'verv house. . For thein and fiirtliclr friends, wchave tldlnps of good cheer una nope tne announcement oi a most Importunl discovery, flrmly hascdupon common nense ana renson, uy wnicn me icrriuie mamuy ib positive ly controlled, and Its victims are restored to ucultii. WILLSON'S . CARBQLATED COD LIVER OIL Is not a secrt-t empirical nostrum. It is a happy com binalion of two vcnicdici known to physicians every where as the best means uf combating consumption. Tim- combination U Mr. Wtll&un's discovery, and la luundcd upon the following SOUND REASONING. Consumption is decav. Foothine. cxnectorant nv edict are only unfful us palliatives ; they do not reach the cause they do uot biup the decay. Tonic medi cines strengthen the life forces aud prolong the bat tle, hut the decay rocs feieadiiy on, aud sooner or later the victim imist yield. C limatic changes are sonictlinee good, hut they seldom wholly cure, la short, the very 11 rst thing to be dune Is to stop th decay , men appiy me resioraiive.iomc anumrcngin living treatment, iiinma moment, 'meltings aro iecaying tubercles, ulcerations, cavities and depos its of poisonous imilter (pus) are funning. The cir 'culatlon carries tnis poison all overthe body. Wast ing, lotts of appetite, enervation, night sweats, and all me len loie B) uipiuutti npi'eur i ! it worm wuiiti w doctor the twmpltnhM, which arc merely the results, while the decay, which 1 the cause. Is eating up tha Hfe springs? These two things are well known by the bent .physi cians: 1st. Carbolic, arid positively arrest Decau. It is the most powerful antiseptic In the known world. Even dead bodies are preserved by it. Entering Into tho circulation. It at once grapples with corruption, and decay ceases, n purines meBourccs oi uucase. 2d. Cod Liver Oil it nature' Uxt txltant in resist ing Consumption. H W at once a food, a tonic, a pu nfier.and ahealer. It braces up and supplies tha vital forces, feedB the wasted system, and enables na ture to regain her foothold, l or these purposes noth ing can compare with Cod LiYer Oil. This iatiie the Wo CAKBOLATED COD LIVER OIL, Ab described fully In the Inventor's circular, which win oe uuuteu,u)on application, loany uuuiusii. Wa mnnnt att'iml smu-n to tell the whole story here. or to give the numerous cerlillcaleB from eminent piiytucians ana wen Known cmzens ieuiyuiK to absolutely wonderful results Bowing from this tcreut discovery. Untllce it to Bay, It Is curing tlmubaud who supposed themselves to be at death's duor. nth the nurcBt Carbolic Acid, so combined as lo be entirely Harmless, wun Sweet Norwegian Cod liver Oil fmm th 1prii-At.fd flnhenefl at Aalesund fXorwavV pronouMccd by physicians the most delicate, etUcleut too Liver "U in me worm. .... , It Is easily taken, tolerated hy the weakest stom achs, digests readily, never becomes ranrld, and Is al most entirely free from the usual disagreeable char acteristics of Cod Liver Oil. r or every UBe oi toa-jivur uu mr n uuu ujbuvt .nUnf ,hft irrontPHt. value. For the safe internal administration of Carbolic Acid Mr. Willeon's method of combining it with Cod Liver uu is auBoiuieir -wuwmii. CARBOLATED COD LIYER OIL la a Specific and Radical Care for CONSUMPTION AND SCROFULOUS DISEASES. Remember the name, "Willson'i Carbolated Cod Liver Oil." It comes In large wedge-shaped bottles, bearing the Inventor's signature, and U told by tha beat druggists. Prepared by J. H. Willson, 83 John St., V, Y. 12,000,000 ACHES ! Cheap Farms ! The Cheapest Land In Market, for sale by tha UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, In the GREAT TLATTB Y ALLEY. 3,000,1100 Acrtf In CentrM Nebraska Now for sale in trnets of forty acres and upwards on five and ten years' credit at 6 per cent. No Advance Interest required. Mild and Healthful Cllmnte, Fertile Doll, an abundance nfOund Water. TUKBKST MARKKT IN THE WEST! The great Mlnlntf Ketflons of Wyomtntf, Colorado, Utah and Kov.nl a, holtttf supplied hy the farmers In the PL.ATTB Valley. SOLDI EH H KNTITLKD TO A STEAD OF 100 ACHES, IIOMK- THK REST LOCATIONS for COLONIES. FREE HOMES FOR ALL 1 Millions of acres oi choice Government Land open for entry under the Homestead Law,near this Oreat Rnilroad. with f?rod markets, and all the conveniences of an old settled country. Free pasnes to purchasers nf Railroad Lands.' Sectional Mnps, showtnjj the Land, also now edi ttrm of Dcst'i-iritive Pamphlet vitb now Nspi r mailed free everywhere. O. F. DAVIS Lnnd Commissioner V P. U. K i OmnhBf Nth Watted : Agents for the " Contributor," a slx-teei.-pniri) relmious and family Taper. Thirteen departments. Rkv. A. R. Eaklk writes for it. 51.M a year, and one of the finest premiums ever offered, (riven to en eh suliscrther. Agent meet maivtlous success. Ono savs, " It only needs n hey to show it. i- sell itself." A fubscrtber sends 100 subscrib ers, and says, "It only took a little over ne dmy fnmmy wiuk." Lirpe comniispions. For terms, samples, ro,. address J. H. Earli, Hoston, Mass. THE GEEAT ALTERATIVE AND ELOOD PUEIFIEIt. It is not a ouack nostrum. Tho ingredients nre published on ctieh bottle of medicine. It is used ond recommended by Physicians wherever it has been introduced. it vin pototrvely cure &CKOFULA in Ha various starjes, J'JJCl' MATJUM, WHITE SWEL LING, GO I T, CWITEE, BJWKCJUT1S, KEJl VOVS BEE I LI TY, JKCLPIEKT CONS VMPTIOK, and all dis eases arising from.an impure condition cf the blood. Bend for our FiOsadalis Almanac, in which yon will find certificates from reliable find trustworthy Physicians, Ministers cf tho Gospel and ethers. Br. E. Wilrcn Carr. nf Ha!(imore, fnj s he Ijbb lin d it in ( attcn cf fic rofula iiml other dif-iatca with li.ucb E1lnf ac tion. Br. T.C. Pugh, of Baltimore, recom mends it to ail pereorjB Buffering with difif-afed Blood. Baying it ia superior to anv TTtrnrntion lie 1-as ever nurd. ' Eev. Babney Ball, of the Baltimore M. E. Cunltrtrjcti t-outh. Fays Lo Iibb been bo much benefitted by Its e, tliat be cheerfully recommends It to all his frienda and acquaintance. Craven & Co., iJriipRiBtc, at Oordonp ville, Vb., fay it never has failed to (jive HalipfBction. Bam'l O. McFadaen.Murfreepboro1, Ttitiieifpce, i-iib it cured him of lihtu matiem shcn atlelrc failed. THE ItOSADALIS IN CONXECTIOS WITn OTTrt will cure Chills and Fever, Liver Complaint, Dys pepsia, etc. We guarantee Rosadalis superior to all other Blood Purifiers, tiend for Descriptive Circular or Almanac. Address CLEMEKTS & CO., 5 S. Commerce St., Laltinwre, Iff. Remember to ask your Drnpgist for Rosapalt- TUT ATllTTITs CI f MOTHERS! Don't fall to procure MBS. WTNSLOW'E SOOTHING 8YEUP FOR CHILDREN TEETH- ma. This valuable preparation hs been used wlta NEVKR-1-" AILING BUCOEBS IN THOUSANDS OF CASES. Tt not onlv rellevpB the child from naln. but invltt- orMtpR the Rtnmnch and bowels, corrects ac-iditv. and pi vi-b tnno and energy to tho wholo system. It will also instantly relieve Griping of the Bowels and Wind Colic. We believe it the BEST and SUREST REMEDY IK THE WORLD In all casc-8 of PYSKHTKKY. AM DIARRHEA IN CHILDREN, whother arisirj ron teethitiu or anv other cause. Depend upon it, mothers, It will give rest to your- selves ana Relief and Health to Tour Infants, Be sure and call or "Mrs. Winalow'i Soothing Syrup.' Having the fac-Blmlle ef "CTJETIS ft PERKIN'B on tlio outBiilo wrapper. Sold by Druggists throughout the World' Thea-Nectar IS A PURR niseis. M- With tiio (iruen Tea Flavor The beat Tea Imported. For Biilo everywhere. And for sale wholesnln only by the GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO No. rl Fulton Bt. AiiA 4 Church Bt.. New York. V. o. Box, o.fcoti Bond for Thpa-Neotar Circular O Itcnutifiil CUrotno mailed free for 2ft eti t AKunta wanted. BULKS & CO., Med ford, Mhbb $10to$21 per day. A (rents wanted vprvwnere. rariicuiarBire H.Bluir Co. St. Louit, Wo (TJ 17 O KACH WEEK AGENTS WANTED 1 i.vvuuoluuas legitimate, Particular frfic. .T. WORTH. Rt. Lonta. Wo.. Wo: r SMHt ak frt S9fl Pr flay ' Agents wanted I All clasBoi wovw 0f working people of either 8ox,youni or old, make more money at work for ub in thei ParticularBfree. Addreas U. 8T11SSON & CO., Port land, Slti, Dr. Whittier, 89S!tpeet' the litre. Consultation or pamphlet free. Call oi write. rfwm THE BEST IN THE WORLD JfVi .jwbj i ww" i iisi s .mm.i' igwiK37W'3ie"M WIESONJSEWlNGlMAGlHNElel 'Hair ft.te?jAjiu rysyuaeRsiis.e.r; CAltPETINGS. VIB1T1NG 8TB ANGERB and our own resident! are specially invited to cull and examine (either as purchasers or visitor) the mauy handsome new thtnus in the Carpet line, tncludins Oilcloths and Mattings, together with a full line of Hugs of me various mum. Among mete gooes are aesigns aud colorings quite as pleasing to the visitors as many OI tne pictures nnng upon wans. RfcEVE L. KNIGHT & BOW, 1222 CuftfiTtfUT Biiuxr. Philadelphia, R- R. R. RADAVAY'S READY RELIEF Cures the VVorstt'amsj ir raoii ONE TO TWENTY MINTTTES. , NOT ONE HOUR . ; AFTXB BBADIXa TnK AnVKBTlSCHRNT ' Need any one Suffer with Pain. v Eadway'i Eeady Belief if a cure for every Fain. IT WAS TBI I-1KST ABO IS THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY thai Instantly stops the most encruclatlnB pnlnf( allays Inflamattons, ad currs CoriKstlntis, wheth er of tho Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other (flaudl or organs, by one application, IN FROM ONK TO TWENTY MINUTES, no tnattr how violent or exrriirlattnff the pain th RHEUMATIC, Bed-rtddpn, Infirm, Crfpiilpd, Ner Tans, Jieuralgic, or prostrated itu disease may suffer. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. , Inflamatlon of the Kidneys, Inflamation of the Bladder, Inflamation of the Bowels, Congestion of the Lungs Bore Throat, Difficult Breath in, Palpitation of the Heart, Hysterics. Croup, Biptheria, , ... ' Catarrh, Influenro, Headache, Toothache, . , , . Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Cold Chills, Ague Chills. The application of the ItKATY RF.UKT to the part Or parts where tha palu or ditUculty exists v. Ill af" lord eaaft and comfort. - ' Twenty drops In half a tumWer of water will In a few mlnutcB cure Cramps, BpusmB. Pour" Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Hi-adaclie, Diarrhet, DyB'-ntery, Colic, Wind In the Dowels, and ll Internal l'-lia. Travellers Bhonl l always carry a bntll" of RAD WAY'S READY RKLIEF with them. A f-w dri.pg in water will prevent BickncBsnr paint from change of water. It is better than French Branuyor Vl ters as a stimulant. . FEVER AND AGUE. wbwb ivn tnrv. rnrorl for flffrrrnffl. Therfl Is not a romrdisl Rffrnt In this world that vfll j r-nra Fpvorand AjtMiP, n-id nllnthPi jwniitrnnu, miuuo, Brarlot. Tvphoid. Yr-llnw, n'ld other I'V vpr fiildcd toy FADWAY H SU q'JKIt BB HAUoa h RllADY HEMFF, ,-. HEALTH, BEAUTY, STRONG AND PUEE BICH BLOOD TNCBEASE OF tLborl AND WhlUJUT ltatt onjLn AND BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION BE CURED TO ALL. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaprilliai Resolvent Has made the most astonishing Cures ; so quick so rapid are tne changes tne oay unaerguub, unaer the Influence of this truly Wonder ful Medicine, that Every Day an Increase in Flesh and Weight is Seen ana Felt. The Grreat Blood Purifier Every dron of tho BAItftAPARTLLTAX RESOL VENT communicntrg through tho ltlmxl, bweat. Urine, and other AuhIb and juices or the pyaftm tne vigor of life, for It repairs the vnstt-s f th undy with new and Bound material. Scrofula, Syphilis, Consumption, Chronic DyspopBin, Glunrtuliir dis eases, Ulcers in the throat, Mouth, Tunm. s. Node In the Glands and other parts Rftho system, Sore Eyus, Struinorous discharges from the Eats, aud the worst forms of Skin disi-asrs. Erui-tlnns, Fever Bores, Scald Head, Ring Worm. Salt Hheum. Erysip elas, Acne, Black Spots. Worms in tho KUsh, Tu mors, Cancers in tho Womb, and all enkening and. painful discharges, lSight t weals, jcss w rperiu and all wastes of thn lifrt prinei pie, are within the curative range of this Modern Chemistry, aud tt few davs1 use will'provo to any person using it for either of theso forms of disease its potent yower to cure them. 1 If the patient, dally becoming reduced by the wastes and decomposition that is continually pro gressing, sncceods in arresting theso wastes, and repairs tno same wun new materim numc n"i healthy blood and this the SARSAI'ARILLIAN will and does secure a cure is certain ; for hen once this remedy commences its work of purification, and succeeds iu diminishing: the loss cf wastes, its. repairs will be rapid, and every day tho patient will feel himself irrewiiiir better and stronger, tho food digesting better, appetite improving and flesh and weight increasing. Not only does the SAiitAi'AniLT.TAN Rf.pot-yent ex cel all known remedial agents in tho euro of Chron ic, Scrofulus, Constitutional, ana Bftin GiBeasco but it is the only positive curt) for Kidney and Bladder Complaints, TTr!nrr. und Wnmh diseases. Gravel. Diabetes. Drops v, Stoppage of Water, Incontinuence of Urine, Bright's Didease, Albuminuria, and in all cases) wnere tnere are Dma-unst aepnon, ur iunri 1b thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the white of an egg, or thrf ads like white Bilk, or there is a morbid, dark, bilious appenrance, and whito bone-duBt deposits, and when mere 11 a r burning sensation when passing water, and paiaiu tho Small of the bac k and along the Loins. Tumor of 12 Years' Growth Cured by Radway's Resolvent. PRICE $1.00 PER BOTTLE. DR. RADWAY'S Perfect Fnrgatiys aM Regulating Pills, perfectly lasteloBB, eleffnntly routed with sweet Utim, l'tirfye, r-KUl:ite, purify, cU-unso and strength en. ItAD WAY'S P1I.LS, fur tho cure cf ull ilism rtei . cf the Hfimirll, Liver, Bowels. Kidneys, Jiliuldcr, Nervous Diseuses, He.ida he. Constipation, Costive, ness. Indigestion, Pysi'e, Bin, Biliousness, Bilious, Typhus and Tyihoid Fevers, Inflammation cf tlio Bowels, Piles, and all Deranffements of the Internal Vifl-ei-ft. Warranted to effeet a positive cure. Pure ly Vecotable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drus. Olsrve the following symptom. rcBulting from disorders of the Digetive ortfiins: Constipation, Inward Piles, J-'ullneFsnf the Blond In the Head, Acidity cf the Ftomarh. Hansen, Heart-burn, DiBtfitBt cf Food, l-'ullnepa or 'Vc-ipht in the Stomach. Suur Eructations, BlnkiiiKor Flutter 'iik at tho Pit cf the Stomach, SwimmioR i f tho Head, Hurried and Difficult Hi -eathiiiB, Fluttering at tha Heart, choking or Buflnratinir Sensations when lti a Lying Posture, PimueBB of Vision, Dots or Webs before tho Bight, Fever and TJiiV Pain it; the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yell a ih-bsoI tbo Skin und Eyes, Pain In tho Bide, flu-sv, Liiul-B, and sudden Flushes of Heat. Burning in the FleBh. A few doacfl of RADWAY'S FILLS will frea the By B tem from all the above named disorders. Price 25 cents per Box. Sold by Druggists. BEAD " FALSE AND TRT'E." Send ono letter Stamp to KADWAY 4 CO., No. SS Warren St., IT. Y. Information worth thousandB will be sent yon. K Y N TJ No 23 $25,000 GIVEN AWAY IX CASH premiums to the subscribers of tho Tkanhatlaktic Magazine. The publishers of tha Transatlantic, instead of expending the above amount in cheap Chromos, will distribute among the first 25.000 new subscribers for the present year the sm of '45,000 in cash, rs follows : One pre sent of 85,000 two of SI, OOO t five of S500 ten of U 100 t nfteeo of $.r0 fifty of 25 two hundred of $10 i and twenty-two hundred aud flfty of 95. The distributioa will be made as boou as 25,000 new names are received. The Transat lantic, now in its seventh volume, contains eauh month 128 pages of the best stories and essays from all the leading foreign magazines, and is the c heap CBt magazine In America, independent of the extra ordinary premiums. This popular magazine for S3. OO per year in advance, and a pr esentbesides 1 hpecimeu copies 26 centi, prepaid. K. A. SCOTT fc CO., Publisher!, Wo. 71 8ansom Street, Philadelphia. SEK or writ Dr. Dodge or Human Wood Experiment and Heart Hrop4n notoriety. Cures rimmntttetL lew Kit, $1,000, REWARD For any case of Blind, Bleed inff. Itching, or Ulceraftad Piles thut IE KING'S P1LH BEMKDY faiU to cure. It is Reward prepared expressly to cure the Piles and nothing else. SOLD BY ALL DKUOQISTS. PRICE t Dr. Whittier, "jB Longest engaired and most successful nhvslclan of the age. Consultations aud pamphlets free. Ca ?r write. 11E A TEA AUKNTB wanted in town and coun try to srll TEA. or act ud club orders, for tha largest Tea Company iu America; importers' price! i iiaucemenis to agents, neon inr cm mar. Vddress, ROBERT V'KLLB, 43 Veseybtreet, Now York. BOYS Great Offer I Pictures I Framea! New I Sample and 74 Page Catalntfun 6 ctB. J' JAY GOULD, aOUrcinnld St., BoBtOD,Ms. WORKIMG CLASS s week guaranteed, liespecta- Meeinnlonsnttut home,diiyoreveniug ;uacapiUilrequir pd;uli itiHtructionB and valuable package of goods euufc Lee by mail. Address, with six -t n.t.irn ....... au iuu.ux ou.,ltiUortlandt.et.f New ivi ii -fir ii i., H-BflrT "AMERICAN SAWS." BEST IN THR WOKLD. MOVAIII.K-TOOTIIEU t'lIM TI.AItS, I'EUFOIMTEII t'ltOMS IX'TS. Rend fnr PatiHiulet to AMERICAS SAW CO., NEW YORK. Howard Association, Philadelphia, Pa. an lustttutlOD baring s high rapututluu fur honor able conduct and professional skill. Acting 8ur goon, J. 8 UOCOHTON, sf. D. Eaaays for Yuuna Men sent free of charge. Address, HOWARD ABSO C1AT10N Kg. 1 Bouth NLuth St., Jlulitelptu, p